BlackRock listed the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF under the ticker ETHB on Nasdaq on March 12, the first cryptocurrency exchange-traded product from the worldBlackRock listed the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF under the ticker ETHB on Nasdaq on March 12, the first cryptocurrency exchange-traded product from the world

BlackRock’s Staking Ethereum ETF Is Live: Here Is What Investors Actually Get

2026/03/12 22:08
4 min read
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BlackRock listed the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF under the ticker ETHB on Nasdaq on March 12, the first cryptocurrency exchange-traded product from the world’s largest asset manager to incorporate native staking rewards, staking between 70% and 95% of held ETH through Coinbase to generate on-chain yield distributed directly to investors.

What ETHB Actually Does Differently

Every spot Ethereum ETF launched before ETHB, including BlackRock’s own ETHA which holds $6.5 billion in assets, tracks ETH price and nothing else. Investors gain exposure to Ethereum’s price movements but receive none of the staking yield that on-chain ETH holders earn by participating in network validation. That yield, currently benchmarked at approximately 2.8% to 3.0% annually depending on network conditions, has been structurally unavailable to ETF investors until today.

ETHB closes that gap. The fund holds spot ETH and stakes between 70% and 95% of total holdings through Coinbase as the operational staking partner. The staking allocation is not fixed at a single percentage but managed dynamically within that range, with the remaining 5% to 30% held as unstaked liquid ETH to handle daily redemptions without requiring unstaking delays. Ethereum’s unstaking process takes days to complete, making the liquidity sleeve a structural necessity rather than an optional buffer.

The reward split gives investors 82% of generated staking rewards with BlackRock and Coinbase sharing the remaining 18%. At current staking yields of 2.8% to 3.0%, investors in ETHB receive approximately 2.3% to 2.46% annually in staking rewards on top of ETH price exposure. The 0.25% sponsor fee applies against that yield, with a 12-month introductory discount to 0.12% on the first $2.5 billion in assets launching today.

The Fee Structure and What It Signals About BlackRock’s Ambitions

The introductory fee waiver to 0.12% on the first $2.5 billion is a direct competitive move. Existing spot ETH ETFs charge between 0.15% and 0.25% for pure price exposure with no yield component. ETHB charges 0.12% for the first year while delivering staking yield on top of price exposure, making it structurally cheaper and more rewarding than every competing product simultaneously during the launch window. The $2.5 billion threshold on the fee waiver suggests BlackRock expects rapid early adoption and is pricing accordingly to accelerate asset gathering before the discount expires.

IBIT’s $55 billion in assets demonstrates BlackRock’s ability to dominate a crypto ETF category once it enters. ETHA’s $6.5 billion represents a smaller but meaningful institutional Ethereum allocation. ETHB targets both populations: existing ETHA holders who want yield added to their position and new institutional investors who require income-generating characteristics before allocating to Ethereum.

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What This Means for Ethereum’s Investment Case

The corporate Ethereum treasury data showed 7.4 million ETH, representing 6.6% of total supply, held by public companies with zero corporate ETH treasuries existing one year ago. The ETH scarcity index on Binance turning positive, exchange supply contracting, and now BlackRock launching a yield-bearing ETF are converging signals pointing toward institutional demand building beneath a price that has underperformed significantly.

The disconnect between Ethereum’s network metrics and its price, covered extensively in this publication this week, has one explanation that the staking ETF directly addresses. Capital has been leaving Ethereum for Bitcoin and Solana because those assets offered cleaner investment narratives. A 2.3% to 2.46% annual yield on top of price exposure changes that narrative for income-oriented institutional investors who could not previously access staking returns through regulated product wrappers.

BlackRock just turned Ethereum into a yield-bearing institutional asset. Whether that reclassification moves the price depends on how much institutional capital was waiting for exactly this product structure before allocating.

The post BlackRock’s Staking Ethereum ETF Is Live: Here Is What Investors Actually Get appeared first on ETHNews.

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